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Dreispitz

The Dreispitz is a mountain of the Bernese Alps, overlooking Kiental in the Bernese Oberland. The summit can be reached by a trail from the Renggpass.

Thuppettan

M. Subramanian Namboodiri (born March 3, 1929), commonly known by his nom de plume Thuppettan, is a Malayalam-language playwright from Kerala, India. Hailing from Panjal, a village in Thrissur district of Kerala, Thuppettan had been a drawing teacher at a local school. His father Ittiravi Namboodiri was a Vedic scholar who tried to reform the conservative practices of the Namboodiri community.

Some of the most famous works of Thuppettan include Thanathu Lavanam, Marumarunnu, Vettakkarappayal, Swaapaharanam Athava Ellarum Argentinayilekku, Bhadrayanam, Kalavastha, Mohanasundarapaalam, Double Act and Chakka. He won the Kerala Sahitya Akademi Award in 2003 for Vannanthye Kaanam, a collection of 10 short and hilarious plays.

Legionnaires' disease

Legionnaires' disease is a form of atypical pneumonia caused by any type of Legionella bacteria. Signs and symptoms include cough, shortness of breath, high fever, muscle pains, and headaches. Nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea may also occur. This often begins two to ten days after being exposed.

The bacterium is found naturally in fresh water. It can contaminate hot water tanks, hot tubs, and cooling towers of large air conditioners. It is usually spread by breathing in mist that contains the bacteria. It can also occur when contaminated water is aspirated. It typically does not spread directly between people and most people who are exposed do not become infected. Risk factors for infection include older age, history of smoking, chronic lung disease, and poor immune function. It is recommended that those with severe pneumonia and those with pneumonia and a recent travel history be tested for the disease. Diagnosis is by a urinary antigen test and sputum culture.

There is no vaccine. Prevention depends on good maintenance of water systems. Treatment of Legionnaires' disease is with antibiotics. Recommended agents include fluoroquinolones, azithromycin, or doxycycline. Hospitalization is often required. About 10% of those who are infected die.

The number of cases that occur globally is not known. It is estimated that Legionnaires' disease is the cause of between two and nine percent of pneumonia cases that occur in the community. There are an estimated 8,000 to 18,000 cases a year in the United States that require hospitalization. Outbreaks of disease account for a minority of cases. While it can occur any time of the year it is more common in the summer and fall. The disease is named after the outbreak where it was first identified, the 1976 American Legion convention in Philadelphia.

Siret (river)

The Siret or Sireth (, , , ) is a river that rises from the Carpathians in the Northern Bukovina region of Ukraine, and flows southward into Romania before it joins the Danube. It is long, of which in Romania, and its basin area is , of which in Romania. In ancient times, it was named Hierasus ( Ancient Greek Ιερασός).

Siret

Siret (; ; ; ) is a town in Suceava County, north-eastern Romania. It is situated in the historical region of Bukovina. Siret is the eleventh largest urban settlement in the county, with a population of 7,721 inhabitants, according to the 2011 census. It is one of the oldest towns in Romania and it was the capital of the former principality of Moldavia, in the late 14th century. The town administers two villages: Mănăstioara and Pădureni.

Firemath

Firemath is a WYSIWYG equation editor which generates MathML. It is open source software published under the GNU General Public License (GPL) version 3. Firemath is an addon for the web browser Firefox. It uses the rendering facilities of the browser.

Valeriodes

Valeriodes is a genus of moths of the Noctuidae family.

Bestwig

Bestwig is a municipality in the Hochsauerland district, in North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany.

Fantasm

Fantasm is a 1976 softcore pornographic film, directed by Richard Franklin under a pseudonym. It was followed by a sequel, Fantasm Comes Again, the following year, directed by a pseudonymous Colin Eggleston.

Juon

Juon may refer to:

  • Paul Juon, noted classical composer
  • Steve 'Flash' Juon, OHHLA webmaster, founder of rec.music.hip-hop and more
  • Ju-on, a series of horror films originating in Japan; remade in English as The Grudge by the same director
Chkhalta

Chkhalta (; ; ) is a village in the upper part of the Kodori Valley, situated in Gulripshi District, Abkhazia, a breakaway republic from Georgia.

Dūdas

The dūdas is a type of bagpipe native to Latvia and Estonia, popular from the 16th to 18th centuries.

Dudas

Dudas may refer to;

  • Eszter Dudás, a Hungarian professional triathlete
  • József Dudás, a Hungarian resistance leader,
  • Jon Dudas, Former under Secretary of Commerce for Intellectual Property and Director of the United States Patent and Trademark Office
  • Richard Dudas American composer of contemporary classical music
  • Dūdas, a Baltic bagpipe
Junto (club)

The Junto, also known as the Leather Apron Club, was a club for mutual improvement established in 1727 by Benjamin Franklin in Philadelphia. The Leather Apron Club's purpose was to debate questions of morals, politics, and natural philosophy, and to exchange knowledge of business affairs. They were also a charitable organization which created a subscription public library consisting of their own books.

Junto

Junto may refer to:

  • Whig Junto (c. 1700), English political leaders' group, that began to dominate the ministry from 1693 and held onto power intermittently until 1717 when members of the group fell out
  • Junto (club) (c. 1730), a Philadelphia club started by Benjamin Franklin
  • Junto (album), the seventh album by Basement Jaxx
Junto (album)

Junto is the seventh album by English electronic music duo Basement Jaxx, released in August 2014 by record labels Atlantic Jaxx and PIAS. It is the duo's first full-length album since Zephyr in 2009, and was announced on 19 May 2014. The title is taken from the song "Power to the People". The album sees a stylistic return to the duo's house roots and away from the more pop and dance-influenced sound of their previous few records.

The album earned mostly positive reviews upon release, holding an aggregate 71 out of 100 on Metacritic. It reached into the top 30 of the UK Albums Chart, among charting in Australia, Belgium, Ireland, Japan, South Korea and on the United States Billboard charts. Junto spawned five singles, which were "Back 2 the Wild", "What a Difference Your Love Makes", "Unicorn", " Never Say Never" and "Galactical", with "Never Say Never" being a topper of the US Hot Dance Club Songs chart.

Mi'ar

Mi'ar was a Palestinian village located 17.5 kilometers east of Acre. Its population in 1945 was 770. The Crusaders referred to it as "Myary". By the 19th century, during Ottoman rule, it was a large Muslim village. The village was a center of Palestinian rebel operations during the 1936–39 Arab revolt in Palestine against British rule, which began in 1917, and the village consequently completely dynamited by the British. Mi'ar was later restored, but it was depopulated by Israeli forces during the 1948 Arab-Israeli War. Its land are currently occupied by the Jewish communities of Atzmon and Ya'ad.

Managee

Managee can be:

  • In management, a person who is managed (the opposite of a manager).
  • In computing theory, a process or application that is managed by another process or application.
Tetylkivtsi

Tetylkivtsi is a village (selo) in Brodivskyi Raion, Lviv Oblast, in western Ukraine.

From 1918 to 1939 the village was in Tarnopol Voivodeship in Poland.

Lacistodes

Lacistodes is a genus of moth in the family Gelechiidae.

Kankalitala

Kankalitala is a temple town in Bolpur subdivision of Birbhum district in the Indian state of West Bengal.

Polychromator

A polychromator is an optical device that is used to disperse light into different directions to isolate parts of the spectrum of the light. A prism or diffraction grating can be used to disperse the light. Unlike a monochromator, it outputs multiple beams over a range of wavelengths simultaneously. Monochromators have one exit slit and one wavelength at a time can pass through that slit. Polychromators have multiple exit slits, each of which allows a different wavelength to pass through it. A detector is placed after each slit so that the light at each wavelength is measured by a different detector. Polychromators are often used in spectroscopy.

Spectrograph is a closely related term. Spectrographs generally do not make use of exit slits. Instead, they use a single spatially selective detector (such as photographic film or a charge-coupled device). Spectrographs are generally used to observe a continuous range of wavelengths, while polychromators are more commonly used to observe several discrete wavelengths, leaving gaps in-between.

Imeľ

Imeľ (, Hungarian pronunciation:) is a village and municipality in the Komárno District in the Nitra Region of southwest Slovakia.

Imel

Imel may refer to:

  • Imeľ, a village in Komarno District in south Slovakia
  • Jack Imel of the Lawrence Welk Show

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Bolmów

Bolmów is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Blizanów, within Kalisz County, Greater Poland Voivodeship, in west-central Poland. It lies approximately north of Blizanów, north of Kalisz, and south-east of the regional capital Poznań.

Y.A.S.

Y.A.S. is an electronic music duo, formed in 2007 in Paris, France, and consists of Mirwais Ahmadzaï ( keyboard/ guitar) and Yasmine Hamdan ( vocals).

The duo began recording their debut album, Arabology, in 2007. Ahmadzaï wanted to create an electronic music album that had an Arab identity. Moreover, he wanted to present a different representation of Arab culture to balance the view of Arabs as "terrorists" often publicized in the Western media. The album was released in France and Belgium in June 2009 to positive reviews from music critics.

Taketoshi

Taketoshi (written: 武敏) is a masculine Japanese given name. Notable people with the name include:

  • (born 1980), Japanese baseball player

  • (1926–2012), Japanese actor

Blondet

Blondet is a surname that it may refer to:

  • Francis Blondet, French diplomat
  • Giselle Blondet, Puerto Rican actress and TV host
  • Héctor Blondet, Puerto Rican basketball player
Reudemannoceratidae

The Reudemannoceratidae are the ancestral and most primitive of the Discosorida, an order of cephalopods from the early Paleozoic. The Reudemannoceratidae produced generally medium-sized endogastric and almost straight shells with the siphuncle slightly ventral from the center.

Nitte

Nitte is a village in Karkala taluk of Udupi district, in the Indian state of Karnataka. The village is on the way from Padubidri to Karkala. It is 8 km away from Karkala, 26 km from Udupi and 54 km from Mangalore. It is located on the foothills of the Western Ghat mountains and receives very high rainfall.

Phua

Phua is a Malaysian and Singaporean spelling of the Chinese family name Pan (Mandarin), also spelled Poon or Phoon (Cantonese), and Pua, Puah or Phuah (Hokkien, Teochew or Hainanese) and may refer to:

  • Denise Phua (born 1959), Singaporean politician
  • Phua Siok Gek Cynthia (born 1958), Singaporean politician
  • Willie Phua (born 1928), Singaporean photojournalist
  • Phua Chu Kang, character in the Singaporean sitcom of the same name
  • Dr Phua Kai Hong, professor in health policy/health economist, National University of Singapore
Kopparberg

Kopparberg is a locality and the seat of Ljusnarsberg Municipality, Örebro County, Sweden, with 4,200 inhabitants in 2015. It is famous for one of the most valuable postage stamps in the world, the Treskilling Yellow from 1857-July-13, Kopparberg's (wooden) Church (voted #1 in Sweden in 2006), and Kopparberg Cider, now the number 1 selling cider in the UK and worldwide.

The name kopparberg means copper mountain. This name is traditionally associated with Falun, some 90 km to the north, and gave its name to Kopparbergs län (now called Dalarna County) and the 700-year-old mining company Stora Kopparberg, which is now part of Stora Enso. However, the town was founded as late as 1635 with the name Nya Kopparberget (new copper mountain). It was named after the copper mines that were, in the 18th century, a major supply of the world's copper, and a considerable contributor to the Swedish national economy. Kopparberg lies on a major north-south road, 80 km north of Sweden's sixth most populous city, Örebro. Örebro is in the middle of Sweden, lying on the east-west 500 km/300 mile E18/E20 highway and also train lines that directly connect Stockholm, Sweden, to Oslo, Norway. These are some of the busiest in Sweden.

Tompion

Tompion (1957–?) was an American Thoroughbred race horse.

Jaa

Jaa or JAA can refer to the following:

  • Joint Aviation Authorities, European aviation regulatory agency
  • Japan Asia Airways, For Japan Asia Airways
  • Jaa (food), staple food of the Newars people in Nepal.
  • Tony Jaa, Thai martial art film actor
  • Jaaa, song by artist "Die Fantastischen Vier" from their album " Vier gewinnt"
  • Jaa, Punjabi song by Dakssh Ajit Singh 'n' Mannat Singh released by Tasbee Muzic
RLUA

RLUA may refer to:

  • TRNA pseudouridine32 synthase, an enzyme
  • 23S rRNA pseudouridine746 synthase, an enzyme
Gnanapuram

Gnanapuram is one of the residential areas in Visakhapatnam, Andhra Pradesh.

Infectious mononucleosis

Infectious mononucleosis (IM), also known as mono, or glandular fever, is an infection commonly caused by the Epstein–Barr virus (EBV). Most people are infected by the virus as children, when the disease produces little or no symptoms. In young adults, the disease often results in fever, sore throat, large lymph nodes in the neck, and feeling tired. Most people get better in two to four weeks; however, feeling tired may last for months. The liver or spleen may also become swollen. In less than one percent of cases splenic rupture may occur.

Infectious mononucleosis is usually caused by Epstein–Barr virus (EBV), also known as human herpesvirus 4, which is a member of the herpes virus family. A few other viruses may also cause the disease. It is primarily spread through saliva, but can rarely be spread through semen or blood. Spread may occur by objects such as drinking glasses or toothbrushes. Those who are infected can spread the disease weeks before symptoms develop. Mono is primarily diagnosed based on the symptoms and can be confirmed with blood tests for specific antibodies. Another typical finding is increased blood lymphocytes of which more than 10% are atypical. The monospot test is not very useful.

There is no vaccine for EBV. Prevention is by not sharing personal items or kissing those infected. Mono generally gets better on it own. Recommendations include drinking enough fluids, getting sufficient rest, and taking pain medications such as paracetamol (acetaminophen) and ibuprofen.

Mono most commonly affects those between the ages of 15 to 24 years in the developed world. In the developing world, people are more often infected in early childhood when the symptoms are less. In those between 16 and 20 it is the cause of about about 8% of sore throats. About 45 per 100,000 people develop mono each year in the United States. Nearly 95% of people have been infected by the time they are adults. The disease occurs equally at all times of the year. Mononucleosis was first described in the 1920s and is colloquially known as "the kissing disease".

Vibrion

Vibrion is an antiquated term for microorganisms, especially a pathogenic ones; see Germ theory of disease. The term may specifically refer to motile microorganisms.

Out of Luck

Out of Luck is a 1923 American comedy film directed by Edward Sedgwick and starring Hoot Gibson.

LincVolt

LincVolt is a 1959 Lincoln Continental, owned by musician Neil Young, that was converted into a more fuel-efficient, hybrid demonstrator vehicle.

According to the LincVolt website, the goal of the LincVolt project is "to inspire a generation by creating a clean automobile propulsion technology that serves the needs of the 21st Century and delivers performance that is a reflection of the driver's spirit. By creating this new power technology, Lincvolt hopes to reduce the demand for petro-fuels enough to eliminate the need for war over energy supplies, thereby enhancing the security of the USA and other nations throughout the world."

LincVolt participated in the Xprize Progressive Insurance Automotive X Prize. The LincVolt team had to withdraw from the X Prize competition as they were making a car whereas the purpose of the competition was to produce a commercial business plan.

A documentary film was being produced by Larry Johnson before his death on January 21, 2010.

On the morning of November 9, 2010, a fire started in LincVolt's charging system while it was recharging at a warehouse belonging to Young. The car was damaged, but it has been restored. The last version of the LincVolt's hybrid engine uses Domestic-Green Carbon-Neutral Cellulosic Ethanol from Biomass.

Expm

Expm or expm may refer to:

  • expm1, an abbreviation for the exponent minus 1 function in some Hewlett-Packard RPL scientific calculators
  • Matrix exponential, a function in the MATLAB computer algebra system
Out Like a Light

Out Like a Light is a live album by jazz musician John Scofield.

Kurung

Kurung may refer to:

  • Kurung Kumey district, one of the 17 districts of the northeastern Indian state of Arunachal Pradesh
  • Kurung River in Arunachal Pradesh
  • Kurung language, see Gurung language
  • Baju Kurung, a traditional Malay costume
Sudogda

Sudogda is a town and the administrative center of Sudogodsky District in Vladimir Oblast, Russia, located on the left bank of the Sudogda River ( Klyazma's tributary) southeast of Vladimir, the administrative center of the oblast. Population:

WNUW

WNUW may refer to:

  • WNUW-LP, a low-power radio station (98.5 FM) licensed to serve Aston, Pennsylvania, United States
  • WPEN (FM), a radio station (97.5 FM) licensed to serve Burlington, New Jersey, United States, which held the call sign WNUW from 2008 to 2009
  • WMYX-FM, a radio station (99.1 FM) licensed to serve Milwaukee, Wisconsin, United States, which held the call sign WNUW from 1970 to 1981
Cbonds

Cbonds is a financial News agency and data vendor operating in Russia, Ukraine and Kazakhstan. Its main business lines include :

  • developing and maintenance of financial information websites (cbonds.info, investfunds.ru, preqveca.ru);
  • holding financial conferences, round tables and shows;
  • publishing activity (Cbonds Review magazine and annual handbooks);

The group’s history started in 2000 with the launch of the company’s first information project www.cbonds.ru, Cbonds.ru LLC was registered in June 2001. Then the company expanded its coverage area to include Ukraine and Kazakhstan and launched more projects.

Hylasia

Hylasia is a genus of moth in the family Geometridae.

Andesia

Andesia is a genus of moths of the Noctuidae family.

Long Wall

Long walls were ancient Greek defensive structures between cities and ports, especially the Long Walls linking Athens to Piraeus and Phalerum.

Long Wall may also refer to:

  • Anastasian Wall
  • Long Wall (Thracian Chersonese)
  • Long Wall of China, officially known as the Great Wall
  • Long Wall of Vietnam
  • Long Wall of Korea, built by Goryeo
  • Longwall mining, an underground mining technique
  • Andram, meaning 'long wall', a line of hills in J. R. R. Tolkien's stories of Middle-earth
Long Wall (Thracian Chersonese)

The Long Wall or Wall of Agora after the nearby city, was a defensive wall at the base of the Thracian Chersonese (the modern peninsula of Gallipoli) in Antiquity.

Makafeke

A makafeke is a Tongan octopus snare which consists of a shell lashed to a line. The word is derived from the Tongan words maka ("stone" or "rock") and feke (" octopus").

Septem

Septem may refer to:

  • Ceuta, for which Septum is an ancient name, derived from the seven hills surrounding it, known as the seven brothers
  • 7 (number) , Latin septum
  • Septem, a 2011 album by Black Flame
Dubovo (Žitorađa)

Dubovo is a village in the municipality of Žitorađa, Serbia. According to the 2002 census, the village has a population of 608 people.

Dubovo

Dubovo may refer to:

  • Dubovo (Tutin), a village in Tutin, Serbia
  • Dubovo (Žitorađa), a village in Žitorađa, Serbia
  • Dubovo, the Russian name for Dubău, a commune in Transnistria, Moldova
Fille

Fille may refer to:

  • Fillé, a commune in France
WGCC-FM

WGCC-FM (90.7 FM) is an American college radio station broadcasting an Album Oriented Rock format in Batavia, New York. The station is currently owned by Genesee Community College and is located on the third floor of the Batavia Campus of Genesee Community College and is run primarily by students who work there.

WGCC hosted a concert called Rockfest. Local bands to the Rochester/Buffalo area such as Down To Earth Approach and New Skin have played at this concert. In 2000, Disturbed was the headlining band for Rockfest, but do to unfortunate circumstances, they were unable to play, thus canceling that year's show. Another band, who was a hopeful for Rockfest 2006 was Kittie, but due to a previously scheduled touring event, they were scratched from the lineup. As of Fall 2012 Rockfest is no more, and been replaced by Play Eat and Trick or Treat: An indoor trick of treat for children in the surrounding area.

WGCC currently broadcasts with 880 watts Effective Radiated Power (ERP), which gives the station an average broadcast radius of 25 miles. Its antenna has a Height Above Average Terrain (HAAT) of 50 meters. The FCC regulations for ERP and HAAT are listed under Title 47, Part 73 of the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR).

Venkatraopalle

Venkatraopalle is a municipal village in Boinpalle mandal of Karimnagar district in the state of Telangana, India. It lies exactly 18 km away from Karimnagar, located on the highway from Karimnagar to Vemulawada.

Calliocloa

Calliocloa is a genus of moths of the Noctuidae family.

Coolin'

Coolin' is an album by the Prestige All Stars nominally led by vibraphonist Teddy Charles recorded in 1957 and released on the Prestige label.

Nevřeň

Nevřeň is a village and municipality ( obec) in Plzeň-North District in the Plzeň Region of the Czech Republic.

The municipality covers an area of , and has a population of 229 (as at 3 July 2006).

Nevřeň lies approximately north-west of Plzeň and west of Prague.

Tree nymph

Tree nymph is another term for a Dryad in Ancient Greek mythology.

It can also refer to either of two or three genera of the brush-footed butterfly family (Nymphalidae). They occur in different parts of the world and are not particularly closely related:

  • Idea (genus), the Asian tree nymphs or paper butterflies, from the milkweed butterfly subfamily (Danainae)
  • Ideopsis, the Southeast Asian tree- and wood nymphs, also known as glassy tigers, from a different lineage of Danainae
  • Sevenia, the African tree nymphs, from the tropical brushfoot subfamily (Biblidinae)
Bayanjargalan

Bayanjargalan is the name of two sums (districts) in Mongolia:

  • Bayanjargalan, Dundgovi
  • Bayanjargalan, Töv
Photo Booth

Photo Booth is a software application for taking photos and videos with an iSight camera by Apple Inc. for Mac OS X and iOS (on the iPad and iPad Mini available starting with the iPad 2).

Photo Booth displays a preview showing the camera's view in real time. Thumbnails of saved photos and videos are displayed along the bottom of this window. These can be shown or played by double clicking on the thumbnails.

Clicking the large red button underneath the preview area will take a picture after an optional countdown.

By default, Photo Booth's live preview and captured images are reversed horizontally, to simulate the user looking into a mirror; an option provides unreversed images.

Photo booth (disambiguation)

Photo booth may refer to:

  • Photo booth, a vending machine or modern kiosk which contains an automated, usually coin-operated, camera and film processor
  • Photo Booth, a small software application for taking photos with an iSight camera by Apple Computer for Mac OS X
  • "Photobooth", a song by Death Cab for Cutie from their 2000 The Forbidden Love EP
EOIR
Vilabertran

Vilabertran is a municipality in the comarca of Alt Empordà, Girona, Catalonia, Spain.

Vilabertran (Dalí)

Vilabertran (1913) is a painting by the Spanish surrealist artist Salvador Dalí. This is among Dalí's earliest works, having been painted when he was about nine years old. It is a landscape painting from Vilabertran as Dalí often drew in his early period.

Category:1913 paintings

Brain-sur-l'Authion

Brain-sur-l'Authion is a former commune in the Maine-et-Loire department in western France. On 1 January 2016, it was merged into the new commune of Loire-Authion.

Ak47 (rapper)

Ak47 (born Alex Keonig in Côte d'Ivoire) is a Swiss hip hop recording artist and the founder of JD Records.

Swag started his career at age 13 when he began composing music, and was well known in his hometown as a rapper. Swag began performing with his friends Sevillano & Sine as the group the "A2S Crew".

In November 2011, he released his street clip entitled "Illegal in the Blood". He was involved in a political provocation in ( Le Nouvelliste) when he referred to the UDC with the phrase, "...pursuin til' the end of the world, I would put the mother of Freysinger on the tip of a bomb."

In December 2011, he released an album titled "The First Episode."

On December 14, 2011, he released a small clip of the song entitled "Let them Talk, the Jealous Will Lose Weight".

In November 2011 Ak47 launched his own clothing line called Ak47.

Alex, Often known as the originator of the swag movement has been known over the years as one of our nation's most treasured rap artists, leading the industry with such chart-topping singles as "Faded O's" and "50 Spray Mane".

Tabtoxin

Tabtoxin, also known as wildfire toxin, is a simple monobactam biotoxin produced by Pseudomonas syringae. It is the precursor to the antibiotic tabtoxinine β-lactam. Tabtoxin is a monocyclic β-lactam produced by P. syringae pv. tabaci, coronafaciens, and garcae. Pseudomonas syringae pv. tabaci, the causal agent of the wildfire of tobacco, produces the phytotoxin tabtoxin. tabtoxin-producing bacterium, P. syringae BR2, causes a disease of bean (Phaseolus vulgaris) similar to tobacco wildfire. This organism is closely related to P. syringae pv. tabaci but cannot be classified in the pathovar tabaci because it is not pathogenic on tobacco. Tabtoxin has been shown to be a dipeptide precursor that must undergo hydrolysis by a peptidase to yield the biologically active form, tabtoxinine-p-lactam (TβL). Tabtoxin is required by BR2(R) for both chlorosis and lesion formation on bean. All mutations that affected tabtoxin production, whether spon- taneous deletion or transposon induced, also affected lesion formation, and in all cases, restoration of tabtoxin production also restored pathogenic symptoms. Other factors may be required for BR2 to be pathogenic on bean, but apparently these are in addition to tabtoxin production.

Benthall

Benthall may refer to:

  • Benthall, Northumberland
  • Benthall, Shropshire
    • Benthall Hall located there
  • Michael Benthall (1919 - 1974), English theatre director
Telelove

Telelove is the debut solo album by Suze DeMarchi, lead singer of Australian band the Baby Animals, released in March, 1999. The album's original title was to be Messages Delayed but was changed prior to release.

RVG

RVG may refer to:

  • Rabies Virus Glycoprotein
  • Relative Value of Growth
  • Reina Valera Gomez, a Spanish Bible translation based on the Textus Receptus
  • Right Ventriculogram
  • Radiovisiography
  • Ruby Vector Graphics
  • Rudy Van Gelder, American audio engineer
  • RVG, a cocktail involving Wray and Nephew's White Rum
Rassilon

Rassilon is a fictional character in the British science fiction television series Doctor Who. In the backstory of the programme, he was the founder of Time Lord society on the planet Gallifrey and its first leader, as Lord High President. After the original television series ended in 1989, Rassilon's character and history were developed in books and other media.

Usage examples of "rassilon".

He went to a bar in a sidestreet where the raucous hybrid beerhall music of the north was blaring from an open door and he got very drunk and got in a fight and woke in the gray dawn on an iron bed in a green room with paper curtains at a window beyond which he could hear roosters calling.

The Fiasco feels better on these sidestreets, where it can show off its acceleration.

From the sidestreets, it had well-manicured lawns and tidy houses, too many strip restaurants and the ubiquitous mall.

The car cut hard to the left, barreling down a sidestreet toward the East River.

He ate a breakfast of coffee and pan dulce at a cafe counter in a sidestreet off the square and he entered a farmacia and bought a bar of soap and put it in the pocket of his jacket along with his razor and toothbrush and then set out along the road west.

As they pulled away from a traffic light, Allen noticed a car parked in a sidestreet.